首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 406 毫秒
1.
Cysteine residues have been exchanged for serine residues at positions 10 and 108 in the epsilon subunit of the Escherichia coli F1 ATPase by site-directed mutagenesis to create two mutants, epsilon-S10C and epsilon-S108C. These two mutants and wild-type enzyme were reacted with [14C]N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) to examine the solvent accessibility of Cys residues and with novel photoactivated cross-linkers, tetrafluorophenyl azide-maleimides (TFPAM's), to examine near-neighbor relationships of subunits. In native wild-type F1 ATPase, NEM reacted with alpha subunits at a maximal level of 1 mol/mol of enzyme (1 mol/3 alpha subunits) and with the delta subunit at 1 mol/mol of enzyme; other subunits were not labeled by the reagent. In the mutants epsilon-S10C and epsilon-S108C, Cys10 and Cys108, respectively, were also labeled by NEM, indicating that these are surface residues. Reaction of wild-type enzyme with TFPAM's gave cross-linking of the delta subunit to both alpha and beta subunits. Reaction of the mutants with TFPAM's also cross-linked delta to alpha and beta and in addition formed covalent links between Cys10 of the epsilon subunit and the gamma subunit and between Cys108 of the epsilon subunit and the alpha subunit. The yield of cross-linking between sites on epsilon and other subunits depended on the nucleotide conditions used; this was not the case for delta-alpha or delta-beta cross-linked products. In the presence of ATP+EDTA the yield of cross-linking between epsilon-Cys10 and gamma was high (close to 50%) while the yield of epsilon-Cys108 and alpha was low (around 10%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
To understand the regulatory function of the gamma and epsilon subunits of chloroplast ATP synthase in the membrane integrated complex, we constructed a chimeric FoF1 complex of thermophilic bacteria. When a part of the chloroplast F1 gamma subunit was introduced into the bacterial FoF1 complex, the inverted membrane vesicles with this chimeric FoF1 did not exhibit the redox sensitive ATP hydrolysis activity, which is a common property of the chloroplast ATP synthase. However, when the whole part or the C-terminal alpha-helices region of the epsilon subunit was substituted with the corresponding region from CF1-epsilon together with the mutation of gamma, the redox regulation property emerged. In contrast, ATP synthesis activity did not become redox sensitive even if both the regulatory region of CF1-gamma and the entire epsilon subunit from CF1 were introduced. These results provide important features for the regulation of FoF1 by these subunits: (1) the interaction between gamma and epsilon is important for the redox regulation of FoF1 complex by the gamma subunit, and (2) a certain structural matching between these regulatory subunits and the catalytic core of the enzyme must be required to confer the complete redox regulation mechanism to the bacterial FoF1. In addition, a structural requirement for the redox regulation of ATP hydrolysis activity might be different from that for the ATP synthesis activity.  相似文献   

3.
Shi XB  Wei JM  Shen YK 《Biochemistry》2001,40(36):10825-10831
Ten truncated mutants of chloroplast ATP synthase epsilon subunit from spinach (Spinacia oleracea), which had sequentially lost 1-5 amino acid residues from the N-terminus and 6-10 residues from the C-terminus, were generated by PCR. These mutants were overexpressed in Escherichia coli, reconstituted with soluble and membrane-bound CF(1), and the ATPase activity and proton conductance of thylakoid membrane were examined. Deletions of as few as 3 amino acid residues from the N-terminus or 6 residues from the C-terminus of epsilon subunit significantly affected their ATPase-inhibitory activity in solution. Deletion of 5 residues from the N-terminus abolished its abilities to inhibit ATPase activity and to restore proton impermeability. Considering the consequence of interaction of epsilon and gamma subunit in the enzyme functions, the special interactions between the epsilon variants and the gamma subunit were detected in the yeast two-hybrid system and in vitro binding assay. In addition, the structures of these mutants were modeled through the SWISS-MODEL Protein Modeling Server. These results suggested that in chloroplast ATP synthase, both the N-terminus and C-terminus of the epsilon subunit show importance in regulation of the ATPase activity. Furthermore, the N-terminus of the epsilon subunit is more important for its interaction with gamma and some CF(o) subunits, and crucial for the blocking of proton leakage. Compared with the epsilon subunit from E. coli [Jounouchi, M., Takeyama, M., Noumi, T., Moriyama, Y., Maeda, M., and Futai, M. (1992) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 292, 87-94; Kuki, M., Noumi, T., Maeda, M., Amemura, A., and Futai, M. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 4335-4340], the chloroplast epsilon subunit is more sensitive to N-terminal or C-terminal truncations.  相似文献   

4.
Crystal structures of peroxisomal Arabidopsis thaliana 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase (AtKAT), an enzyme of fatty acid beta-oxidation, are reported. The subunit, a typical thiolase, is a combination of two similar alpha/beta domains capped with a loop domain. The comparison of AtKAT with the Saccharomyces cerevisiae homologue (ScKAT) structure reveals a different placement of subunits within the functional dimers and that a polypeptide segment forming an extended loop around the open catalytic pocket of ScKAT converts to alpha-helix in AtKAT, and occludes the active site. A disulfide is formed between Cys192, on this helix, and Cys138, a catalytic residue. Access to Cys138 is determined by the structure of this polypeptide segment. AtKAT represents an oxidized, previously unknown inactive form, whilst ScKAT is the reduced and active enzyme. A high level of sequence conservation is observed, including Cys192, in eukaryotic peroxisomal, but not mitochondrial or prokaryotic KAT sequences, for this labile loop/helix segment. This indicates that KAT activity in peroxisomes is influenced by a disulfide/dithiol change linking fatty acid beta-oxidation with redox regulation.  相似文献   

5.
The relationship between activation of the latent ATPase activity of isolated chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1) and reduction of a disulfide in the gamma subunit has been assessed. The sulfhydryl residues involved in the disulfide bond are distinct from residues normally accessible to maleimide modification during incubation of thylakoids in the dark or the light. Dithiothreitol-induced activation is time dependent, and correlates with reduction of the disulfide. Sulfhydryl residues exposed during activation can be reoxidized to disulfide by incubation with iodosobenzoate , with a concomitant loss of ATPase activity. Activation and deactivation are reversible, but deactivation is prevented by treatment of the reduced enzyme with N-ethylmaleimide. Heat activation does not reduce the disulfide bond unless dithiothreitol is present during activation. Prior heating of CF1, which partially activates the enzyme, renders the disulfide more susceptible to subsequent dithiol reduction. The activity obtained when heat and dithiothreitol are used together is approximately equal to the sum of the partial activations obtained with heat or dithiothreitol alone. Iodosobenzoate has no effect on heat-activated CF1. Enzyme activated by heating in the presence of dithiothreitol can be partially deactivated, consistent with reversal of the activity attributable to the dithiol effect. Fluorescence polarization of anilinonaphthylmaleimide bound to the reduced enzyme indicates that the sulfhydryl residues involved in the disulfide are in a less rigid environment than the other two sulfhydryl residues in the gamma subunit. Polarization of anilinonaphthylmaleimide bound to these sulfhydryls is reduced by heat treatment of CF1. The increased susceptibility of the disulfide to reduction upon heat treatment, and the activation of ATPase activity with or without disulfide bond cleavage are indicative of conformational changes within the gamma subunit that occur during the conversion of CF1 from a latent to an active ATPase. In addition the results are consistent with at least two distinct conformational forms of CF1 that can hydrolyze ATP.  相似文献   

6.
The chloroplast F0F1-ATP synthase-ATPase is a tiny rotary motor responsible for coupling ATP synthesis and hydrolysis to the light-driven electrochemical proton gradient. Reversible oxidation/reduction of a dithiol, located within a special regulatory domain of the γ subunit of the chloroplast F1 enzyme, switches the enzyme between an inactive and an active state. This regulatory mechanism is unique to the ATP synthases of higher plants and its physiological significance lies in preventing nonproductive depletion of essential ATP pools in the dark. The three-dimensional structure of the chloroplast F1 gamma subunit has not yet been solved. To examine the mechanism of dithiol regulation, a model of the chloroplast gamma subunit was obtained through segmental homology modeling based on the known structures of the mitochondrial and bacterial γ subunits, together with de novo construction of the unknown regulatory domain. The model has provided considerable insight into how the dithiol might modulate catalytic function. This has, in turn, suggested a mechanism by which rotation of subunits in F0, the transmembrane proton channel portion of the enzyme, can be coupled, via the ε subunit, to rotation of the γ subunit of F1 to achieve the 120° (or 90°+30°) stepping action that is characteristic of F1 γ subunit rotation.  相似文献   

7.
A hybrid ATPase composed of cloned chloroplast ATP synthase beta and gamma subunits (betaC and gammaC) and the cloned alpha subunit from the Rhodospirillum rubrum ATP synthase (alphaR) was assembled using solubilized inclusion bodies and a simple single-step folding procedure. The catalytic properties of the assembled alpha3Rbeta3CgammaC were compared to those of the core alpha3Cbeta3CgammaC complex of the native chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1) and to another recently described hybrid enzyme containing R. rubrum alpha and beta subunits and the CF1 gamma subunit (alpha3Rbeta3RgammaC). All three enzymes were similarly stimulated by dithiothreitol and inhibited by copper chloride in response to reduction and oxidation, respectively, of the disulfide bond in the chloroplast gamma subunit. In addition, all three enzymes exhibited the same concentration dependence for inhibition by the CF1 epsilon subunit. Thus the CF1 gamma subunit conferred full redox regulation and normal epsilon binding to the two hybrid enzymes. Only the native CF1 alpha3Cbeta3CgammaC complex was inhibited by tentoxin, confirming the requirement for both CF1 alpha and beta subunits for tentoxin inhibition. However, the alpha3Rbeta3CgammaC complex, like the alpha3Cbeta3CgammaC complex, was stimulated by tentoxin at concentrations in excess of 10 microm. In addition, replacement of the aspartate at position 83 in betaC with leucine resulted in the loss of stimulation in the alpha3Rbeta3CgammaC hybrid. The results indicate that both inhibition and stimulation by tentoxin require a similar structural contribution from the beta subunit, but differ in their requirements for alpha subunit structure.  相似文献   

8.
Treatments that enhance the latent ATPase activity of the chloroplast coupling factor (CF1) also induce hypersensitivity of the gamma subunit toward trypsin. A number of different gamma subunit cleavage products are formed (Moroney, J. V., and McCarty, R. E. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 5910-5914). We have compared the gamma cleavage products of membrane-bound and isolated CF1, activated either by reduction of the gamma disulfide bond or by removal of the epsilon subunit. The gamma subunit of isolated CF1 lacking the epsilon subunit was cleaved to a 27,000-Da species. The same cleavage site became exposed following energy-dependent conformational changes in the membrane-bound enzyme. Activation by reduction of the gamma disulfide bond also exposed this site. However, the gamma subunit of reduced CF1 was cleaved rapidly at an additional site and trypsin treatment gave rise to a 25,000-Da gamma species. The small peptide generated by the second cleavage contains one of the cysteinyl residues of the reduced disulfide bridge of gamma. This peptide dissociates from the enzyme and can be isolated by gel filtration. The close proximity of the trypsin cleavage sites to the disulfide bond of gamma is discussed with respect to the effects of tryptic cleavage on the ATPase activity of CF1. The data indicate that structural changes in a limited region of the gamma subunit strongly influence the catalytic properties of both soluble and membrane-bound CF1.  相似文献   

9.
Current literature on the structure and function of the chloroplast ATP synthase is reviewed with an emphasis on the roles of the gamma and epsilon subunits. Together these two subunits are thought to couple, via rotation, the proton motive force to nucleotide synthesis and hydrolysis by the catalytic F(1) segment of the enzyme. These two subunits are also responsible for inducing the latent state of the enzyme that is necessary to prevent futile hydrolysis of ATP in the dark when electron transfer and ATP synthesis are inactive. A model is presented to explain how gamma and epsilon interact to achieve the transition between the active and latent states.  相似文献   

10.
In F1-ATPase, the rotation of the central axis subunit gamma relative to the surrounding alpha3beta3 subunits is coupled to ATP hydrolysis. We previously reported that the introduced regulatory region of the gamma subunit of chloroplast F1-ATPase can modulate rotation of the gamma subunit of the thermophilic bacterial F1-ATPase (Bald, D., Noji, H., Yoshida, M., Hirono-Hara, Y., and Hisabori, T. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 39505-39507). The attenuated enzyme activity of this chimeric enzyme under oxidizing conditions was characterized by frequent and long pauses of rotation of gamma. In this study, we report an inverse regulation of the gamma subunit rotation in the newly engineered F1-chimeric complex whose three negatively charged residues Glu210-Asp211-Glu212 adjacent to two cysteine residues of the regulatory region derived from chloroplast F1-ATPase gamma were deleted. ATP hydrolysis activity of the mutant complex was stimulated up to 2-fold by the formation of the disulfide bond at the regulatory region by oxidation. We successfully observed inverse redox switching of rotation of gamma using this mutant complex. The complex exhibited long and frequent pauses in its gamma rotation when reduced, but the rotation rates between pauses remained unaltered. Hence, the suppression or activation of the redox-sensitive F1-ATPase can be explained in terms of the change in the rotation behavior at a single molecule level. These results obtained by the single molecule analysis of the redox regulation provide further insights into the regulation mechanism of the rotary enzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have been made against each of the five subunits of ECF1 (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon), and these have been used in topology studies and for examination of the role of individual subunits in the functioning of the enzyme. All of the mAbs obtained reacted with ECF1, while several failed to react with ECF1F0, including three mAbs against the gamma subunit (gamma II, gamma III, and gamma IV), one mAb against delta, and two mAbs against epsilon (epsilon I and epsilon II). These topology data are consistent with the gamma, delta, and epsilon subunits being located at the interface between the F1 and F0 parts of the complex. Two forms of ECF1 were used to study the effects of mAbs on the ATPase activity of the enzyme: ECF1 with the epsilon subunit tightly bound and acting to inhibit activity and ECF1* in which the delta and epsilon subunits had been removed by organic solvent treatment. ECF1* had an ATPase activity under standard conditions of 93 mumol of ATP hydrolyzed min-1 mg-1, cf. an activity of 7.5 units mg-1 for our standard ECF1 preparation and 64 units mg-1 for enzyme in which the epsilon subunit had been removed by trypsin treatment. The protease digestion of ECF1* reduced activity to 64 units mg-1 in a complicated process involving an inhibition of activity by cleavage of the alpha subunit, activation by cleavage of gamma, and inhibition with cleavage of the beta subunit. mAbs to the gamma subunit, gamma II and gamma III, activated ECF1 by 4.4- and 2.4-fold, respectively, by changing the affinity of the enzyme for the epsilon subunit, as evidenced by density gradient centrifugation experiments. The gamma-subunit mAbs did not alter the ATPase activity of ECF1*- or trypsin-treated enzyme. The alpha-subunit mAb (alpha I) activated ECF1 by a factor of 2.5-fold and ECF1F0 by 1.3-fold, but inhibited the ATPase activity of ECF1* by 30%.  相似文献   

12.
Trypsin cleavage has been used to probe structure-function relationships of the Escherichia coli ATP synthase (ECF1F0). Trypsin cleaved all five subunits, alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon, in isolated ECF1. Cleavage of the alpha subunit involved the removal of the N-terminal 15 residues, the beta subunit was cleaved near the C-terminus, the gamma subunit was cleaved near Ser202, and the delta and epsilon subunits appeared to be cleaved at several sites to yield small peptide fragments. Trypsin cleavage of ECF1 enhanced the ATPase activity between 6- and 8-fold in different preparations, in a time course that followed the cleavage of the epsilon subunit. This removal of the epsilon subunit increased multisite ATPase activity but not unisite ATPase activity, showing that the inhibitory role of the epsilon subunit is due to an effect on cooperativity. The detergent lauryldimethylamine oxide was found to increase multisite catalysis and also increase unisite catalysis more than 2-fold. Prolonged trypsin cleavage left a highly active ATPase containing only the alpha and beta subunits along with two fragments of the gamma subunit. All of the subunits of ECF1 were cleaved by trypsin in preparations of ECF1F0 at the same sites as in isolated ECF1. Two subunits, the beta and epsilon subunits, were cleaved at the same rate in ECF1F0 as in ECF1 alone. The alpha, gamma, and delta subunits were cleaved significantly more slowly in ECF1F0.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Fluorescent probes were attached to the single sulfhydryl residue on the isolated epsilon polypeptide of chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF1), and the modified polypeptide was reconstituted with the epsilon-deficient enzyme. A binding stoichiometry of one epsilon polypeptide per CF1 was obtained. This stoichiometry corresponded to a maximum inhibition of the Ca2+-dependent ATPase activity of the enzyme induced by epsilon removal. Resonance energy transfer between the modified epsilon polypeptide and fluorescent probes attached to various other sites on the enzyme allowed distance measurements between these sites and the epsilon polypeptide. The epsilon-sulfhydryl is nearly equidistant from both the disulfide (23 A) and the dark-accessible sulfhydryl (26 A) of the gamma subunit. Measurement of the distance between epsilon and the light-accessible gamma-sulfhydryl was not possible due to an apparent exclusion of modified epsilon from epsilon-deficient enzyme after modification of the light-accessible site. The distances measured between epsilon and the nucleotide binding sites on the enzyme were 62, 66, and 49 A for sites 1, 2, and 3, respectively. These measurements place the epsilon subunit in close physical proximity to the sulfhydryl-containing domains of the gamma subunit and approximately 40 A from the membrane surface. Enzyme activity measurements also indicated a close association between the epsilon and gamma subunits: epsilon removal caused a marked increase in accessibility of the gamma-disulfide bond to thiol reagents and exposed a trypsin-sensitive site on the gamma subunit. Either disulfide bond reduction or trypsin cleavage of gamma significantly enhanced the Ca2+-ATPase activity of the epsilon-deficient enzyme. Thus, the epsilon and gamma polypeptides of coupling factor 1 are closely linked, both physically and functionally.  相似文献   

14.
We have previously shown that the E31C-substituted epsilon subunit of F1 can be cross-linked by disulfide bond formation to the Q42C-substituted c subunit of F0 in the Escherichia coli F1F0-ATP synthase complex (Zhang, Y., and Fillingame, R. H. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 24609-24614). The interactions of subunits epsilon and c are thought to be central to the coupling of H+ transport through F0 to ATP synthesis in F1. To further define the domains of interaction, we have introduced additional Cys into subunit epsilon and subunit c and tested for cross-link formation following sulfhydryl oxidation. The results show that Cys, in a continuous stretch of residues 26-33 in subunit epsilon, can be cross-linked to Cys at positions 40, 42, and 44 in the polar loop region of subunit c. The results are interpreted, and the subunit interaction is modeled using the NMR and x-ray diffraction structures of the monomeric subunits together with information on the packing arrangement of subunit c in a ring of 12 subunits. In the model, residues 26-33 form a turn of antiparallel beta-sheet which packs between the polar loop regions of adjacent subunit c at the cytoplasmic surface of the c12 oligomer.  相似文献   

15.
Cross-linking reagents have been used to link covalently adjacent subunits of solubilized spinach chloroplast coupling factor 1, which is a latent ATPase. 1,5-Difluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene, dimethyl-3,3'-dithiobispropionimidate, and dimethylsuberimidate are able to form bridges of 3 to 11 A between amino groups, and hydrogen peroxide and the o-phenanthroline-cupric ion complex catalyze the oxidation of intrinsic sulfhydryl groups. The five individual subunit bands (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon) and several new aggregate bands can be separated by means of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The same four fastest moving aggregate bands, as characterized by their mobilities, migrate more slowly than the heaviest subunit band and appear with all of the cross-linkers employed. The subunit composition of the aggregate bands has been determined through the use of the reversible cross-linkers, dimethyldithiobispropionimidate, (o-phenanthroline)2Cu(II), and H2O2, and two-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in which aggregates are separated in the first dimension, the disulfide cross-links are cleaved, and the individual subunits present in the aggregates are separated in the second dimension. The subunits are detected by Coomassie brilliant blue staining and by labeling some of the sulfhydryl groups of the gamma and epsilon subunits with radioactive N-ethylmaleimide. The results obtained indicate that the alpha and beta subunits can cross-link directly with each of the other subunits, that two beta subunits are adjacent, and that gamma epsilon, gamma epsilon 2, alpha delta, and beta delta aggregates are present. A minimal subunit stoichiometry consistent with these results is alpha 2 beta 2 gamma delta epsilon 2. A possible structural model of the coupling factor is derived from the data. Similar, but less extensive, experiments have been carried out with the heat-activated coupling factor (which is an ATPase); no differences in the spatial arrangement of subunits are detected from the two-dimensional gel electrophoresis analysis of the cross-linked aggregates.  相似文献   

16.
The epsilon subunit of F(1)-ATPase from the thermophilic Bacillus PS3 (TF(1)) has been shown to bind ATP. The precise nature of the regulatory role of ATP binding to the epsilon subunit remains to be determined. To address this question, 11 mutants of the epsilon subunit were prepared, in which one of the basic or acidic residues was substituted with alanine. ATP binding to these mutants was tested by gel-filtration chromatography. Among them, four mutants that showed no ATP binding were selected and reconstituted with the alpha(3)beta(3)gamma complex of TF(1). The ATPase activity of the resulting alpha(3)beta(3)gammaepsilon complexes was measured, and the extent of inhibition by the mutant epsilon subunits was compared in each case. With one exception, weaker binding of ATP correlated with greater inhibition of ATPase activity. These results clearly indicate that ATP binding to the epsilon subunit plays a regulatory role and that ATP binding may stabilize the ATPase-active form of TF(1) by fixing the epsilon subunit into the folded conformation.  相似文献   

17.
ATP synthases - rotary nano machines - consist of two major parts, F(O) and F(1), connected by two stalks: the central and the peripheral stalk. In spinach chloroplasts, the central stalk (subunits gamma, epsilon) forms with the cylinder of subunits III the rotor and transmits proton motive force from F(O) to F(1), inducing conformational changes of the catalytic centers in F(1). The epsilon subunit is an important regulator affecting adjacent subunits as well as the activity of the whole protein complex. Using a combination of chemical cross-linking and mass spectrometry, we monitored interactions of subunit epsilon in spinach chloroplast ATP synthase with III and gamma. Onto identification of interacting residues in subunits epsilon and III, one cross-link defined the distance between epsilon-Cys6 and III-Lys48 to be 9.4 A at minimum. epsilon-Cys6 was competitively cross-linked with subunit gamma. Altered cross-linking yields revealed the impact of nucleotides and Mg(2+) on cross-linking of subunit epsilon. The presence of nucleotides apparently induced a displacement of the N-terminus of subunit epsilon, which separated epsilon-Cys6 from both, III-Lys48 and subunit gamma, and thus decreasing the yield of the cross-linked subunits epsilon and gamma as well as epsilon and III. However, increasing concentrations of the cofactor Mg(2+) favoured cross-linking of epsilon-Cys6 with subunit gamma instead of III-Lys48 indicating an approximation of subunits gamma and epsilon and a separation from III-Lys48.  相似文献   

18.
It has been suggested that the last seven to nine amino acid residues at the C terminus of the gamma subunit of the ATP synthase act as a spindle for rotation of the gamma subunit with respect to the alpha beta subunits during catalysis (Abrahams, J. P., Leslie, A. G. W., Lutter, R., and Walker, J. E. (1994) Nature 370, 621-628). To test this hypothesis we selectively deleted C-terminal residues from the chloroplast gamma subunit, two at a time starting at the sixth residue from the end and finishing at the 20th residue from the end. The mutant gamma genes were overexpressed in Escherichia coli and assembled with a native alpha3beta3 complex. All the mutant forms of gamma assembled as effectively as the wild-type gamma. Deletion of the terminal 6 residues of gamma resulted in a significant increase (>50%) in the Ca-dependent ATPase activity when compared with the wild-type assembly. The increased activity persisted even after deletion of the C-terminal 14 residues, well beyond the seven residues proposed to form the spindle. Further deletions resulted in a decreased activity to approximately 19% of that of the wild-type enzyme after deleting all 20 C-terminal residues. The results indicate that the tip of the gammaC terminus is not essential for catalysis and raise questions about the role of the C terminus as a spindle for rotation.  相似文献   

19.
F1-type ATPase is the central enzyme for ATP synthesis in most organisms. Because of the extreme reconstitutability of thermophilic ATPase (TF1) and diversity of the minor subunits of F1 type ATPase, an operon coding for TF1 was isolated from DNA of thermophilic bacterium PS3, and its terminal region containing the epsilon subunit (TF1 epsilon) and terminator was sequenced. The primary structure of the epsilon subunit (Mr = 14 333) was deduced from the nucleotide sequence (396 base-pairs) and amino-acid sequence of its amino terminus. The conclusions drawn from the results are as follows. Homologies: TF1 epsilon shows only 6% homology with the epsilon subunits of eight species reported, but 50% homology with Escherichia coli epsilon and 41% with chloroplast. The residues having a tendency to form reverse turns (Gly, Pro and Tyr) and His are relatively well conserved. Unlike some F1 epsilon types TF1 epsilon has no ATPase inhibitor activity and is not homologous with ATPase inhibitor. TF1 epsilon is essential to connect F1 to F0, like the b subunit, and is weakly homologous with the b subunit of F0F1. The cause of 3 beta: 1 epsilon subunit stoichiometry: The ribosome binding sequence of TF1 epsilon is TAGGN7, which is incomplete compared with that of TF1 beta. The codon usage for TF1 epsilon is similar to that for TF1 epsilon. The cause of stability of TF1 epsilon and its gene: There are 18 ionic groups at the putative reverse turns and the N- and C-termini of TF1 epsilon, but only 10 ionic groups in the corresponding sites of E. coli epsilon subunit. These ionic groups enhance the external polarity of TF1 epsilon and may intensify subunit-subunit interaction. There is a terminator at the 3' end of the TF1 epsilon gene, which is stabilized by a long (13 base-pairs) stem.  相似文献   

20.
General structural features of the chloroplast ATP synthase are summarized highlighting differences between the chloroplast enzyme and other ATP synthases. Much of the review is focused on the important interactions between the epsilon and gamma subunits of the chloroplast coupling factor 1 (CF(1)) which are involved in regulating the ATP hydrolytic activity of the enzyme and also in transferring energy from the membrane segment, chloroplast coupling factor 0 (CF(0)), to the catalytic sites on CF(1). A simple model is presented which summarizes properties of three known states of activation of the membrane-bound form of CF(1). The three states can be explained in terms of three different bound conformational states of the epsilon subunit. One of the three states, the fully active state, is only found in the membrane-bound form of CF(1). The lack of this state in the isolated form of CF(1), together with the confirmed presence of permanent asymmetry among the alpha, beta and gamma subunits of isolated CF(1), indicate that ATP hydrolysis by isolated CF(1) may involve only two of the three potential catalytic sites on the enzyme. Thus isolated CF(1) may be different from other F(1) enzymes in that it only operates on 'two cylinders' whereby the gamma subunit does not rotate through a full 360 degrees during the catalytic cycle. On the membrane in the presence of a light-induced proton gradient the enzyme assumes a conformation which may involve all three catalytic sites and a full 360 degrees rotation of gamma during catalysis.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号